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12/17/2015

The silliness of background checks, a very simple way to defeat being on the "no-fly" list

Congressman Tom McClintock recounts his own experience being on the "no-fly" list. How was McClintock able to get around the ban that he faced on flying? He just had to fly under his middle name, which supposedly is "Miller." Suppose that the IRA activist "that the British government was mad at" whose name was similar to McClintock's had also started using his middle name and that it was "Richard." If the federal government started trying to make sure that the person of interested couldn't go that route, then not only would people with the name "Tom McClintock" find themselves prevented from flying, but also people with the name "Richard McClintock" or "Rich McClintock."

From McClintock's speech on Thursday, December 10th, 2015:

“While serving in the California state Senate a decade ago, I discovered suddenly I couldn't check into a flight. When I asked why, I was told I was on this government list. The experience was absolutely "Kafkaesque." My first reaction was to ask, ‘Why am I on that list?’ ‘We can’t tell you.’ ‘What are the criteria you use?’ ‘That’s classified.’ ‘How can I get off this list?’ ‘You can’t.’ I soon discovered that another California state Senator had been placed on that list. A few months later US Senator Edward Kennedy found himself on the list. I at least had the office of sergeant-at-arms of the state Senate to work through, something an ordinary American would not. Even so it took months working through that office, with repeated petitions to the government to get my name removed from that list. And the farce of it all was that I was advised in the meantime just to fly under my middle name, which I did without incident . . . ."

Of course, the whole process is silly for another reason. Take the recent revelation that ISIS has a machine that let's them make "perfect" fake Syrian passports for just a few hundred dollars. Then the whole notion of denying people the ability to fly is worthless. There are an infinite number of different names that could be placed on those fake passports. With billions of dollars at their disposal, is it really serious to believe that ISIS could fake US documents? Interestingly, illegal ("undocumented") aliens in the United States have been able to get driver's licenses in some states (such as New Mexico) and then use those licenses to get passports. In any case, if "undocumented" people can get a driver's license, it raises the concern about the ability for terrorists to get around the federal background check system for purchasing guns.

So the "no-fly" background check system could be completely useless in stopping ISIS terrorists from flying, but may only make life miserable for law-abiding Americans. (One slight clarification of McClintock's statements: Senator Kennedy was actually on the "no-fly" list five times.)

All this also provides an additional reason for why using the "no-fly" list won't stop terrorists from buying guns. In any case, virtually everyone who is stopped from buying a gun is a false positive, a law-abiding citizen who should have been able to buy but was caught in the Kafkaesque type world that McClintock found himself in. It is something to consider as the Obama administration and Hillary Clinton keep pushing to use the "no-fly" for purchasing guns.

12/16/2015

An amazing interview by Kurt Russell on Gun Control, "put some controls? So the people who want to defend themselves can't?"

Kurt Russell: If you think gun control, or something like that, is going to change the terrorists’ point of view, I think you’re, like, out of your mind. I think anybody [who says that] is. I think it’s absolutely insane.

The problem that we are having right now is that we don't have the concepts of how to turn it around and say, you may think you've got me worried about what you are going to do, Dude, you’re about to find out what I’m gonna do, and that’s gonna worry you a lot more. And that‘s what we need. That will change the concept of gun culture, as you call it, to something [like] reality. Which is, if I’m a hockey team and I’ve got some guy bearing down on me as a goal tender, I’m not concerned about what he’s gonna do — I’m gonna make him concerned about what I’m gonna do to stop him. That’s when things change. . . .

Wells: Obama's point was that the guys on the no-fly list, no-fly list because of terrorist connections, can get a gun pretty easily.

Russell: They can also get a bomb pretty easily, so what? They can also get knives and stab you. What are you gonna do about that? They can also get cars and run you over. What are you gonna do about that?

Wells: They didn't kill the people in San Bernardino with . . .

Russell: Well, they killed others that way. Haven't they? Yah. Yah. So what are you going to do? Outlaw everything? That isn't the answer.

Wells: Just put some controls.

Russell: Put some controls? So the people who want to defend themselves can't?

Wells: No, not so you can't, just so the idiots can't get a hold of them.

Russell: Do you really believe that they aren't going to? Are you serious about that?

Secretary of State John Kerry is telling foreign leaders that George Bush stole the 2004 presidential election from him

From the Daily Caller, after claims of fraud in the Afghan 2014 election, John Kerry apparently shared this story with the losing candidate.

After flattering Abdullah for his strength and importance in the country, Kerry said, “I will share with you a very personal experience: When I ran for President of the United States, in 2004, against George Bush, in the end, on Election Day, we had problems in the state of Ohio on how the votes were taking place. I even went to court in America to keep polling places open to make sure my people could vote. I knew that even in my country, the United States, where we had hundreds of years of practicing democracy, we still had problems carrying out that election. The next afternoon, I had a meeting with my people, and I told them that I did not think it appropriate of me to take the country through three or four months of not knowing who the President was. So that afternoon in Boston I conceded to the President and talked about the need to bring the country together. . . . One of the main lessons from this is there is a future. There is a tomorrow.” . . .